When a tree falls: Controls on wood decay predict standing dead tree fall and new risks in changing forests.

PLoS One

Northern Forest Science and Applications, Northern Research Station, Durham, New Hampshire, United States of America.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • When dead trees, called snags, fall, it can change where animals live, affect safety, and increase carbon emissions as they decay.
  • A study of nearly 100,000 snag observations from various forests found that warmer temperatures make snags fall faster because wood decays more quickly in heat.
  • Understanding how quickly snags fall can help forest managers predict changes in the forest and protect wildlife habitats while addressing carbon levels in the environment.

Article Abstract

When standing dead trees (snags) fall, they have major impacts on forest ecosystems. Snag fall can redistribute wildlife habitat and impact public safety, while governing important carbon (C) cycle consequences of tree mortality because ground contact accelerates C emissions during deadwood decay. Managing the consequences of altered snag dynamics in changing forests requires predicting when snags fall as wood decay erodes mechanical resistance to breaking forces. Previous studies have pointed to common predictors, such as stem size, degree of decay and species identity, but few have assessed the relative strength of underlying mechanisms driving snag fall across biomes. Here, we analyze nearly 100,000 repeated snag observations from boreal to subtropical forests across the eastern United States to show that wood decay controls snag fall in ways that could generate previously unrecognized forest-climate feedback. Warmer locations where wood decays quickly had much faster rates of snag fall. The effect of temperature on snag fall was so strong that in a simple forest C model, anticipated warming by mid-century reduced snag C by 22%. Furthermore, species-level differences in wood decay resistance (durability) accurately predicted the timing of snag fall. Differences in half-life for standing dead trees were similar to expected differences in the service lifetimes of wooden structures built from their timber. Strong effects of temperature and wood durability imply future forests where dying trees fall and decay faster than at present, reducing terrestrial C storage and snag-dependent wildlife habitat. These results can improve the representation of forest C cycling and assist forest managers by helping predict when a dead tree may fall.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5942820PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0196712PLOS

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